Facebook For Dummies Cheat Sheet - dummies.
Recently I have created a Facebook group where all bloggers can share their knowledge and connect with each other. While writing the rules for that group, I realized that I am not able to do much formatting with the TEXT in Facebook Text editor. This is my FB Group Link. The Facebook text editor is not a typical HTML editor, so all common features like bold, italic, color, underline, link etc.
Is there any way of opening a web browser with a default Facebook (hosted on Facebook server) publishing form? I see different websites opening a new window with that form when Share button is clicked and then you click Publish and here you go - the post is on the wall :).
The wall is basically the old name for the Timeline, when Facebook introduced Timeline, they renamed the wall Timeline. The newsfeed is a stream of your friends Facebook activities. Your wall (aka Timeline) is your own list of activities you have carried out on Facebook.
You might be familiar with a privacy feature of Facebook in which you can lock your facebook wall and make it protected so that no one or some people can write on it. Obviously there must be some of your friends with this private wall on which you might not be able to write something. But there’s a very simple way of doing that.
There is a way you can use formatting markup, instead of writing a normal Facebook status update, you need to create a Facebook Note, it lets you insert images and create links, use bold or italic text, create lists (ordered or unordered), use H1 and H2 headings etc. If you want to be able to use formatting in a normal status update or a comment on someone's timeline you can use a tool that.
How To Properly Resize Images So They Fit On Facebook Page Timelines. Michael Keating October 9, 2013 How-Tos, Social Media 7 Comments. It really should be a very easy task and one that I have a hard time considering to be an Internet marketing tip at all. I’m talking about uploading a photo to your Facebook fan page.
The outline of a body is drawn on a large sheet of paper, which is stuck onto the wall. This can be as simple as a drawing of a gingerbread man or the teacher can carefully draw around one of the participants lying on a roll of paper. Alternatively you can project an image onto the paper and draw around the silhouette.